..Information to Pharmacists
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Your Monthly E-Magazine
DECEMBER, 2003


ROLLO MANNING

An Indigenous/Rural/Isolated/Remote Perspective

Little Achieved, but Agenda set for 2004

The Federal Health Minister does not think Woolworth should be allowed to sell prescription drugs.
This was reported on ABC News on 25th November 2003.
The year has finished on a note of "Woolworth's" and this has been one of the the central themes throughout the year
Minister Tony Abbott said "Dispensing drugs is not just like selling groceries," he said.

"These are potential quite dangerous, certainly they need to be very properly dispensed and people need to receive detailed professional advice to use them properly."
Yes Mr. Abbott and that is why there are laws to protect the public.
These laws are at a State level and not in the Commonwealth powers - so why has this statement been made?
The answer is simple and it reflects the nature of the year for "official" pharmacy.
2003 has been a year of defence.
Defence against the perils of supermarket style pharmacies.
Defence against the ravages of traditional pharmacy sale lines going to other outlets by their descheduling from the Poisons Acts.
Defence against the inroads caused by technology.
And
Defence against a growing unrest from the younger brigade who are questioning the status quo.

The statement by the Minister is one that closely reflects that of pharmacy leaders through the years that "pharmaceuticals are not ordinary items of commerce".
And yet there is a growing trend for stores to reflect supermarkets in the way they sell pharmacy lines.

A recent visit to "Chemistop" in inner Melbourne revealed a sad reflection on the "ordinary items of
commerce" tag.

 





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Dump bins with scheduled items on special with no supervision of sales apparent.
Yes 100 Paracetamol tablets, 96 Ibuprofen and the recently down scheduled antihistamines.


At a time when hundreds of thousands of dollars are being spent to research the value pharmacists give to sales - this type of approach is not helpful to the case supported by the vast majority of pharmacists.

What hope is there for the future as it is known to the practitioners of today?

Is it any wonder the young graduates and students of pharmacy are questioning where their futures lie and are leaving the retail scene in numbers that are causing the embarrassing "shortage" of registered pharmacists?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Attendance at a "Quality Use of Medicine" Symposium mid year illustrated clearly where they are going - to a more challenging professional environment where they can use their professional knowledge -
at universities, pharmaceutical manufacturers or divisions of general practice as QUM coordinators.

And the other chestnut that continued to pop up was the use of technology. The year has ended with a call from the punters to let it take over if need be and free up the time from dispensing to a more challenging role of talking with consumers.

So we end up with the person we should have started with in the first place - the consumer.
Let us hope that the consumer might dominate the agenda for 2004 even if the subject areas stay the same.

In the words of Woodrow T Wilson:
"I would rather fail in a cause that will ultimately triumph than
to triumph in a cause that will ultimately fail."



All the best to readers for 2004 and may we triumph in doing what we do not want to fail.

Rollo Manning
rollom@bigpond.net.au
08 8942 2101 and 0411 049 872